Pictured is an Egyptian promotional poster designed by Studio
Marcel to promote the 1965 96-minute Henry Barakat black-and-white
film The Sin [al-haram] starring Faten Hamama with screenplay
and dialogue by Sa'd al-Din Wahba and cinematography by Dia El-Mahdy.

This film is beautifully made by one of Egypt's great directors.
It is on film critic Ahmad Al-Hadari's 2007 list of the 100 most
important Egyptian films; it is based on a novel by Youssef Idris. In
a 1984 survey by Al-Fonoon magazine it was voted one of the ten best
films in the history of Egyptian cinema. Plot summary from Wikipedia:
Azizah [Faten Hamama], a poor peasant, portrays worker oppression in
this somber social drama. She gets savagely raped by a guard when she
goes into the fields to gather potatoes. She does not reveal what has
happened to her husband [Abdallah Gheith] who is suffering from an
illness. She conceals the pregnancy and throttles the baby after it is
born. She also dies soon thereafter. The migrant workers rally around
her memory as she becomes a martyr to the cause of the struggling
peasants.